[0001] Dual alloy turbine wheels or dual-property turbine disc have some limited use at
the present time and are extremely attractive for future use in high performance commercial
aircraft engine design. Single alloy turbine discs which are used predominantly in
current technology commercial aircraft engines, are forged from vacuum melted ingots
or are consolidated by various means from pre--alloyed powders. Such a single alloy
must satisfy requirements in both the hub and the rim areas of the turbine disc which
requirements are sometimes in conflict. The two extremes in single-alloy turbine engine
discs today are the forged disc used in commercial and general aviation turbofan engines
and the cast integral turbine wheel typically used in small turbo-prop/turbo-shaft
engines and auxiliary power units. The forged alloys used today will typically have
superior tensile and low cycle fatique (LCF) properties, but quite limited creep rupture
strength while the cast wheel alloys will have the reversed properties, i.e. excellent
creep rupture strength but relatively poor tensile and LCF.
pro
pertie.s. Modern turbofan engines, developing a thrust from 3,000 to 55,000 pounds
( 1350 to 24750Kg) and having cooled separately bladed turbine discs require a turbine
disc hub having maximised tensile strength in order to provide a satisfactory burst
margin. The hub area must also have maximised resistance to low cycle fatigue (LCF)
cracking and crack propagation in order to ensure long turbine disc life. The hub
area must also have good notch ductility to minimise the harmful effects of stress
concentrations, either inherent in the design or induced by undetected flaws in critical
regions. In general, all the desirable qualities for disc hubs are associated with
tough, fine-grained, highly-alloyed materials. In contract to the hub, tensile stress
levels are lower in the ring or rim of a well designed turbine disc, but operating
temperatures are higher and creep resistance becomes an important consideration. With
the current single alloy disc design philosophy, used for modern commercial aircraft
and general aviation engines, the material is chosen primarily to satisfy hub requirements
and sufficient cooling air is supplied to the rim to lower its temperature to the
level, typically about 600-700 C where creep strength of the material is not limiting.
If temperatures and stresses rise to levels where creep strength becomes limiting
in the rims, large-grained alloys with adequate creep-resistance are employed, but
the wheel size and weight are increased, since the large-grained creep-resistance
micro structures have inferior tensile properties to fine-grained material.
[0002] Hence, from the above, it is readily apparent that a dual property turbine disc becomes
quite attractive as optimum properties in each area of the disc will allow the cooling
air requirements for the disc to be minimised or eliminated, with resulting improvement
in engine-operating efficiency. In addition, lighter weight turbine discs, would be
possible with a favourable impact on total aircraft performance.
[0003] A dual alloy turbine disc which provides optimum properties for both the rim and
the hub locations, will also permit superior low cycle fatigue cracking resistance
in each area and will contribute to long life components that will reduce repair costs.
[0004] The dual alloy turbine disc concept is desirable for both separately bladed disc
designs and also integrally-bladed turbine stages as used in small aircraft engines,
which are currently made from a single piece.casting. These small gas turbine engines
are presently used in executive and business jet turboprop applications but are also
receiving consideration for replacement of the current reciprocating engines used
in the general aviation market.
[0005] The dual property turbine disc concept has 2 major variations - the first involving
the use of a single alloy processed differently in the hub and the rim areas. For
example, some manufacturers overspeed disc sufficiently to cause plastic flow in the
hub which pre-stresses the hub in compression, thus reducing its tensile stresses
in normal service. The second major variation of the dual property turbine disc is
the dual alloy turbine wheel which utilises two distinct alloys with dissimilar properties
as required for the rim and the hub area, with an adequate and reliable process to
join the dissimilar alloys. The dual alloy turbine wheel concept has been used in
the 1950's in connection with military engines which utilised AISI Type 4340 alloy
steel hubs fusion welded to Timken 16-25-6 warm-worked stainless steel rims. This
particular combination was used because the alloys could be fusion-welded to yield
joints of adequate strength and freedom from defects which performed well in service.
The advent of stronger alloys, however, made the fusion-welding approach obsolete
as the more complex alloys could not be fusion welded in typical disc thicknesses
without cracking.
[0006] Dissimilar metals may also be welded by the inertia-welding process and this process
has found use in the joining of axial-flow compressor discs into spools and in the
joining of dissimilar metal shafts and turbine wheels. However, the inertia-welding
process has an inherent size limiation in that the largest existing inertia-welding
machines are only capable of welding joints in nickel-base alloys which are a few
square inches in cross section. Hence, this limitation prevents the use of the process
in all but the smallest turbine discs.
[0007] The bonding of dissimilar metals by hot isostatic pressing (HIP) has been suggested
in respect to dual alloy turbine wheels since this process does not have the inherent
joint size limitation of the inertia-welding process. Hot isostatic pressing is a
process developed at Batelle in the United States of America, in which the pressure
is applied equally in all directions multi-directionally through an inert argon gas
in a certified pressure vessel, e.g. an autoclave. The principal limitations for HIP
bonding presently are not completely defined, although the size of the available HIP
autoclave may be a limitation in local areas where HIP autoclaves are not available.
[0008] The Ewing, et al Patent No. 4,152,816, discloses a method for manufacturing a turbine
wheel from dissimilar metals by bonding two dissimilar alloy materials by hot isostatic
pressure. The Ewing et al method utilizes a brazing alloy to seal the disc and rim
prior to hot isostatic pressing. Any discontinuity of flaws in such brazing, however,
will prevent a metallurgically sound bond between dissimilar disc and rim.
[0009] The Catlin Patent U.S. No. 3,940,268, also shows a method for bonding dissimilar
alloy parts by hot isostatic pressing, or vacuum hot pressing and uses a fixture device
to hold the separately manufactured blades in a powder-filled mould during the HIP
processing.
[0010] It is an object of the present invention to use a relatively simple one-piece blade
ring which can be metallurgically bonded to a hub of a dissimilar metal by hot isostatic
pressing.
[0011] It is also an object of the present invention to preassemble the ring and the hub
which are of dissimilar metals, in such a manner as to effect a positive seal for
the interface between the two dissimilar metals.
[0012] Our present invention involves the improvement of a dual alloy turbine wheel manufacture
whereby a bladed ring of high creep resistant material, such as MAR-M247, IN-100 or
other large -grained supperalloys, is integrally bonded to a hub of high tensile strength
material such as Astroloy PM, Rene 95, or other fine-grained alloys, by hot isostatic
bonding (HIP)
[0013] In accordance with our invention, a blade ring having the blades either cast integrally
with the ring or affixed to the ring by a prior art technique, is bonded by hot isostatic
pressing to a hub.member which is either forged, a pre-consolidated alloy powder metal
or loose unconsolidated alloy powder metal of material such as Rene 95 or Astroloy
PM.
[0014] In order to obtain a metallurgically sound weld or bond between the dissimilar metals,
it is necessary to have the outer perimeter of the surfaces to be bonded, sealed during
hot isostatic pressing in a HIP autoclave, so that the adjoining surfaces will be
subject to the autoclave pressure and temperature to effect the desired bond. This
sealing is accomplished by several means according to different prior art techniques,
the only completely effective method being to "can" the entire assembly.
[0015] In accordance with our present invention, however, we have discovered a technique
for bonding a dual alloy turbine wheel in which the (outer) blade ring is pre-assembled
to the hub without canning the entire assembly, but yet which attains an effective
seal to obtain a metallurgically sound bond in the HIP autoclave. In accordance with
our invention, a hub member is inserted into the bore cavity machined in a blade ring
and a plate is then electron-beam. welded and subsequently brazed to the hub and the
ring to seal the hub inside the blade ring cavity. After hot isostatic pressing to
bond the hub to the blade ring, the plate may be removed and the turbine wheel finish
machined.
[0016] Our invention will be described herein in reference to several related embodiments
of the invention, which are illustrated in the attached drawings, wherein:
FIGURE 1 is a cross-sectional view of a dual alloy axial wheel assembled for HIP bonding
in accordance with our present invention;
FIGURE 2 is a cross-sectional view of a dual alloy radial-flow wheel assembled preparatory
to HIP bonding in accordance with our present invention;
FIGURE 3 is a cross-sectional view of a dual alloy radial-flow wheel with a stub shaft
hub, assembled preparatory to HIP bonding in accordance with our present invention;
FIGURE 4 is a photograph of a partial cross-sectional of a dual alloy axial turbine
wheel HIP bonded in accordance with our present invention;
FIGURE 5 is a photograph of a partial cross- section of a radial-flow turbine wheel
HIP bonded in accordance with our present invention;
FIGURE 6 is a photomacrograph at 2X of the HIP bonded dual alloy ring hub bond joint,
shown in FIGURE 5;
FIGURE 7 is a photomicrograph at 400X of the dual alloy HIP bonded joint shown in
FIGURES 5 and 6;.
FIGURE 8 is a photomicrograph (at 100X) of the dual alloy HIP bonded axial wheel ring
hub joint, shown in FIGURE 4; and
FIGURE 9 is a photomicrograph (at 400X) of the dual alloy HIP bonded axial wheel ring
hub bond joint shown in FIGURES 8 and 4.
[0017] The dual alloy turbine disc concept may be applied both to separately bladed disc
designs and integrally bladed turbine disc wherein the blade and the ring are made
from a single member. The integrally bladed turbine stages are used most often in
small gas turbine engines for executive and business jet turbo-prop applications.
The blade and ring portion of the turbine wheel which' requires a high stress-rupture
strength, i.e. creep resistance, is most commonly cast from such nickel base superalloys
as Inco 713LC and MAR-M247. The hub portion is most generally a wrought member, either
forged or compacted from loose pre-alloyed powder or preconsolidated powder, of such
alloys as Astroloy PM, Rene 95 and the like, the latter of which are both formed and
bonded in the hot isostatic pressing process. Relative small metal movement will occur
during HIP bonding with solid pieces, while loose powders will deform non-uniformly
in complex configurations by 30 to 40%
[0018] The development of powder metallurgical techniques, particularly the argon atomisation
of nickel base superalloys into powders has led to the common use of powder metallurgical
techniques for turbine hubs. According to this technology, a large powder atomiser
consisting basically of a vacuum-induction melting furnace, is physically located
on top of a large vertical tank. After melting of the alloy to the proper chemistry,
the melting chamber is pressurised to atmospheric pressure with argon gas, an interlock
valve is opened, and the molten metal poured from the induction furnace into an atomising
unit. The stream of molten alloy is broken in the atomising unit into myriads of tiny
droplets that solidify into powder particles and are collected in the bottom of the
vertical tank. The powders are then screened, classified, and blended into a large
master blend, the chemistry of which becomes the "master heat" chemistry of the powder.
The consolidation of the powder after its manufacture is accomplished either by extrusion
or by hot isostatic pressing, which may or may not be followed by forging.
[0019] The mechanism whereby hot isostatic processing consolidates loose metal powders,
is basically that of pressing extremely clean surfaces together at pressures greatly
in excess of the flow stress of the metals of the HIP temperature. The powders sequentially
densify, bond, and plastically flow until consolidation occurs.
[0020] HIP bonding of nickel alloys may be accomplished by three techniques:
1. solid to solid
2. solid to powder
3. powder to powder
[0021] Techniques 1 and 2 are particularly useful in accordance with our present invention.
The dual alloy radial turbine wheel shown in FIGURE 2 exemplifies a bond of a solid
Astroloy hub forging to a solid Inco 713LC blade ring casting. The dual alloy axial
turbine wheel shown in FIGURE 4 has a solid MAR-M247 cast ring bonded to a consolidated
PM Rene 95 hub. Generally, it has been found that the same range of HIP parameters
used to consolidate powders of the nickel base superalloys will also produce sound
bonds. Typically, the appropriate HIP temperatures are 1180°C to 1230°C ( 2050°F to
2250°F) at 15 KSI ( 72.4 M N /m
2) for three to four hours.
[0022] The main processes for producing as-HIP shapes, involve the use of either metal or
ceramic shaped container. In general, the metal-can process is less expensive and
complicated than the ceramic can process, although the latter has the advantage of
producing more complex shapes. The greatest problem encountered with HIP consolidation
of superalloy parts, has been the defects associated with can leakage during hot isostatic
pressing. Such leakage results in a spongy, non-consolidated part.
[0023] In reference to the drawings, FIGURE 1 shows an wheel arranged for HIP bonding in
accordance with our present invention. Axial flow turbine ring 10 is a casting of
IN-100 nickel base alloy with the blades 12 cast integrally with the ring 10. A hub
preform 14 is machined from previously HIP densified logs (cylinders) and inserted
into the cavity 13 machined in wheel 10. A plate 16 is then electron-beam welded to
the ring 10 and electron beam weld spikes 11 affix the plate 16 to the ring hub assemblage,
after which the outer circumference of the plate 16 is brazed to the lip area 15 of
the ring, by activated diffusion bonding, to seal the preformed hub in the ring cavity.
Activated diffusion bonding is described in the November 1970 Welding Research Supplement
of the Welding Journal of the American Welding Society at pp 505-S to509-S by George
Hoppin, III and T.F. Berry. The hot isostatic pressing process then metallurgically
bonds the outer surface area of the preformed hub 14 to the inner surface of ring
10 and the dual alloy wheel may then be finish machined to remove the plate 16 and
finish the wheel to specification. An alloy plate 16' is similarly affixed to the
opposite end of the ring bore 13 to seal the back side of the ring hub interface for
bonding.
[0024] The soundness of the bonded joint shown in FIGURE 1 was determined by non-destructive
inspection (NDI) and the joint efficiency confirmed by microstructural analysis and
mechanical property testing. FIGURES 4-9 are actual photographs of HIP bonded dual
alloy joints showing the integrity of dual alloy bonds preformed in accordance with
our present invention.
[0025] FIGURE 2 shows the assembly arrangement used to bond a dual alloy radial wheel, with
an integrally cast radial ring 20 machined to receive a radial hub preform 22 which
may be either a forging, loose powder, or a pre-consolidated powder alloy hub. A sealing
plate 24 of a compatible alloy, i.e. Inco 625 is first electron beam welded to the
hub preform 22 and then brazed to the blade ring at 26, by activated diffusion bondings.
The electron beam weld spikes are shown at 28 and the braze bead at 26. A smaller
alloy plate 25 is electron beam welded and ADB brazed to the small bore of the wheel
ring 20 to seal the back side of the ring hub interface 27.
[0026] FIGURE 3 shows a dual alloy radial wheel assembled for HIP bonding with a shaped
can 30 utilised to contain the stub shaft 32 of the backside of the wheel. The cast
radial ring 34 is premachined to receive the hub preform 36 made of a pre- consolidated
Astroloy PM powder. The shaped can 30 seals the ring hug interface by electron beam
welding to the blade ring 34 with the electron beam weld spikes 38 and then ADP brazed
at 39. An alloy plate 41 is electron beam welded and ADB brazed to the other end of
the radial ring bore to seal the other end of the ring hub interface.
[0027] The assemblies shown in FIGURES 1-5 were subjected to hot isostatic pressing in an
industrial autoclave operated within the temperature and pressure parameters given
above. The efficiency of the ring to hub bond joint was tested by NDI (non-destructive
inspection), tensile testing at 24°C (75
0F) and at 650°C (1200°F), stress rupture testing, LCF (low cycle fatigue) testing
at 24 °C (75°F) and 538°C (1000°F) fractography and microscopic examination. In respect
to FIGURE 1, the hub preform was Astroloy, the cast ring IN 100 and the plates 16
and 16' Inconel 625.
[0028] FIGURE 4 is a photograph of a dual alloy wheel cross-sectioned after HIP processing,
showing an axial turbine wheel which was pre-assembled for HIP bonding in accordance
with the arrangement shown in FIGURE 1.
[0029] FIGURE 5 is a photograph of a dual alloy wheel cross-sectioned after HIP bonding,
showing a dual alloy radial wheel which was pre-assembled as shown in FIGURE 2.
[0030] FIGURE 8 is a photomicrograph of the HIP bonded joint of the dual alloy axial turbine
wheel shown in FIGURE 4, with the large grained ring shown at the top portion 52 of
the figure being of cast MAR-M 247 and HIP consolidated RENE 95 hub having finer grains,
shown in the lower half 54 of the photograph.
[0031] FIGURE 9 shows the same joint as is shown in FIGURE 8 at higher magnification, i.e.
400X showing the diffusion across the bond joint 56. As can be seen from these photomicrographs,
the HIP induced bond is metallurgically sound with evidence of diffusion through the
bond interface.
[0032] FIGURE 6 is a photomacrograph of the HIP bonded joint of the dual alloy radial turbine
wheel shown in FIGURE 5 with the larger grained radial wheel ring shown in the top
portion 62 of the photograph of the bond interface 64 and the fine grained hub shown
on the lower portion 66 of the photomacrograph. The ring portion 62 of the bond shown
in FIGURE 6 is INCO 713 LC alloy and the fine-grained hub portion 66 of the photo
is forged Astroloy.
[0033] FIGURE 7 is a photomicrograph at 400X of the bond interface shown in FIGURE 6, further
illustrating the metallurgical soundness of the dual alloy HIP bonded wheel.
[0034] Tensile bar test specimens were cut from the axial wheel shown in FIGURE 4 and the
radial wheel shown in FIGURE 5 in such a manner that the bond interface lines were
located in the gauge-length centers. These. test bars were then subjected to tensile
testings and in the test the specimens from both wheels, the tensile bars failed in
the cast materials rather than at the bond line.
[0035] Stress-rupture test bars were also cut from the axial wheel and subjected to stress-rupture
test and the test bar specimen from the axial wheel shown in FIGURE 4 failed in the
RENE 95 hub portion after over 500 hours at 760°C and 85 KSI (
586 M N/M
2) stress. The alloys employed in the turbine wheels to which our present invention
is directed are known metallurgically as "superalloys", i.e. alloys capable of operating
under stress at a temperature in excess of 538°C (1000°F). Many, but not all, of the
superalloys are nickel base gamma-prime strengthened alloys. The ring portion which
is most commonly integrally cast with the blades, is a castable alloy of high gamma-prime
forming elements and having high creep rupture strength. MAR-M 247 is a preferred
ring alloy which has shown excellent high temperature properties up to 982°C (1800°F)
and may be used in the as-HIP plus heat treated form. Cast MAR-M 247 has good stress
rupture strength for turbine blades and has been used for integral turbine wheels.
The INCO alloys IN 713 LC, In-100, IN-792 and IN-738 and MAR-M 200 are also alloys
useful in connection with the integral cast ring component of our present invention.
[0036] The hub portion of the turbine wheel of the present invention is a wrought alloy,
forged rolled extruded, extruded from alloy powder, either pre-consolidated prior
to HIP bonding or consolidated by the HIP bonding'process. The preferred alloys for
the hub have lower gamma-prime forming elements and develop higher tensile strength
as required in the wheel hub. RENE 95 which is a well know nickel base alloy developed
by General Electric Co., Astroloy PM which is a product of The Special Metals Company,
IN 718, and Waspaloy are wrought alloys of the type which are suitable for the hub
of our dual alloy wheel. PM RENE 95 is an ultra-high strength disc alloy, originally
developed by General Electric Co., as a conventional forged alloy, but was later developed
as a PM alloy. The chemical compositions of the various alloys discussed herein, are
shown in Table I. The properties of these alloys are published in the technical literature,
e.g. the widely distributed booklet "Nickel Base Alloys" 3rd Edition, July, 1977,
published by The International Nickel Company, Inc.
[0037] A first-stage turbine wheel ring from a Garrett TPE331 turboprop engine, was cast
from DS-MAR
-M 247 alloy and HIP bonded to a PM RENE 95 hub in accordance with the method of our
present invention and the HIP dual alloy wheel solution annealed at 1149°C (2100°
F) for 2 hours, air cooled, and stabilised at 871°C (1600 F) for four hours and then
aged for 12 hours at 649°C (1200°F), air cooled. Several mechanical test specimens
were machined from the hub portion, the blade ring portion and across the bond joint
and subjected to mechanical testing at room temperature 24°C (75°F), 649°C (1200°F)
and 760°C (1400°F). The results of these tests are shown in Table II in respect to
specimen 'A'. Three additional dual alloy wheels of the same alloys, were assembled
and HIP bonded in an identical manner, however the as-HIP bonded dual alloy wheel
was not solution annealed after HIP bonding. These latter three wheels were stabilised
at 871°C (1600°
F) for 8 hours, air cooled and then aged for 16 hours at 760°C (1400°F) air cooled.
The results of these tests are shown in Table II as specimen'B'.
[0038] As may be seen from the results in Table II in respect to the solution annealed specimens
'A', none of the bond joint specimens ruptured in the bond joint and the mechanical
properties were equivalent to typical parent metal properties. It should be noted,
however, that the 'B' specimens tended to fail either in or closely adjacent to the
bond joints which tends to show the importance of solution annealing. The tensile
and yield strength of the bond joints of the 'B' specimens were similar to the 'A'
specimen results, however, the ductilities were lower.
[0039] The bond HIP joint requirement would be anticipated to be such that the joint could
operate at 482
0C (900 F) with a maximum combined stress of 60 KSI. It has been found from the above
test that the hub tensile strength is at least 50% greater than cast monolithic MAR-M
247 and the weakest bond joint yield joint is twice as high as the operating stress
in respect to the dual alloy wheel in which an integrally cast MAR-M 247, blade ring
is bonded to a RENE 95 PM hub. The nature of both alloys is such that the stress rupture
failures would never occur at 482
0C (900°F) 60 KSI. The low tensile ductility of the bond joint would tend to reduce
LCF (low cycle fatique) life at higher stresses than 60 KSI but should not be a concern
at the joint operating temperature and stress of 900°F/60 KSI (482°C/
291 M N/m
2)
1. A method for manufacturing a dual alloy turbine wheel having an integral blade
ring of a superalloy of high creep rupture strength at temperatures up to about 982°C
(1800°F), and a wrought superalloy hub of high tensile strength and highly resistant
to low cycle fatique at tensile stress of at least 150,000 psi (105 MKg/m
2), comprising the steps of;
(a) preforming said integral blade ring and said hub with said hub ID (internal diameter)
shaped to receive the outer circumferential surface of said ring in near full surface
area contact at the ring hub surface interface;
(b) sealing said ring hub interface area with a pair of relatively thin-section temperature
resistant plate members; and
(c) subjecting said sealed ring hub assemblage to hot-isostatic pressing to effect
bonding of said ring to said hub.
2. The method of Claim 1 wherein said ring hub interface area is sealed by electron
beam welding followed by brazing.
3. The method of Claim 1, wherein said ring hub interface is pre-assembled prior to
hot isostatic pressing with said plate members covering the exposed portion of said
ring hub interface, and said plate members affixed to said assemblage by first electron
beam welding said plate members to said hub, and thereafter sealing said interface
by applying a braze bead between said plate members and said ring by activated diffusion
bonding.
4. The method of Claim 1 wherein said hot isostatic pressing is conducted in an autoclave
maintained at from 1121°C (2050°F) to 12320C (2250°F) under 15 KSI pressure for 3 to 4 hours.
5. The method of Claim 1 wherein said hot isostatically pressed dual alloy turbine
wheel is solution annealed, thermally stabilised, and thermally aged.
6. The method of Claim 1 wherein said hot hub and ring alloys are nickel base garma-prime
strengthened alloys.
7. The method of Claim 1 wherein said hub member is preformed by forging.
8. The method of Claim 1, wherein said hub member is formed of a loose un-consclidated
alloy powder. which is consolidated by said hot isostatic pressing treatment.
9. A dual alloy turbine wheel having an integral blade ring of an alloy of high creep
rupture strength at temperatures up to about 982°C (1800°F) and a hub of an alloy
of high tensile strength and highly resistant to low cycle fatigue at tensile stress
of at least 150,000 psi (105 MKg/m2) wherein such wheel is bonded by preforming said ring and said hub with hub ID shaped
to receive the outer circumferential surface of said ring in near full surface area
contact, and sealing said ring hub interface with a relatively thin section alloy
member by electron beam welding and activated bond brazing said members to said ring
and hub and said sealed assemblage being subjected to hot isostatic pressing.
10. The dual alloy turbine wheel of Claim 8, wherein said ring is a cast nickel base
superalloy containing a relatively high proportion of gamma-prime forming elements
and said hub is a wrought nickel base superalloy of a lower proportion of gamma prime
forming elements.